Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/jspui/handle/10553/160265
Título: Active Antimicrobial Packaging Systems: Mechanisms of Microbial Control and Applications in Food Preservation
Autores/as: Pérez García, Esteban 
Sanjuán Velázquez, Esther 
Jůzl, Miroslav
Raposo, António
De Figueiredo Saraiva, Ariana Maria 
Jáber Mohamad, José Raduán 
Carrascosa Iruzubieta, Conrado Javier 
Clasificación UNESCO: 310905 Microbiología
3309 Tecnología de los alimentos
Palabras clave: Antimicrobial Packaging
Foodborne Pathogens
Mechanisms Of Microbial Inhibition
Microbial Ecology
Microbial Spoilage
Fecha de publicación: 2026
Publicación seriada: Biology 
Resumen: Microbial spoilage and foodborne pathogens remain central challenges in food safety, driven by the metabolic resilience and ecological adaptability of bacteria, yeasts, and molds across diverse food matrices. Active antimicrobial packaging has emerged as a biologically informed strategy that directly targets microbial physiology through controlled release or contact-mediated mechanisms. These systems employ natural antimicrobials, bacteriocins, essential oils, and metal nanoparticles to disrupt cell membranes, inhibit enzymatic pathways, generate reactive oxygen species, or interfere with quorum sensing, resulting in substantial reductions in microorganisms such as Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella spp., E. coli O157:H7, Pseudomonas spp., Brochothrix thermosphacta, and spoilage fungi. In real food environments, these interventions achieve multi-log reductions and attenuate microbial metabolism, though efficacy varies with pH, water activity, fat content, and storage temperature. Oxygen scavengers further reshape microbial ecology by suppressing aerobic spoilage organisms while inadvertently favoring anaerobic competitors. Despite promising outcomes, concerns regarding nanoparticle migration, microbial resistance potential, and matrix-dependent performance highlight the need for deeper microbiological validation. Future progress will require integrative research linking microbial ecology, packaging material science, and mechanistic toxicology. By aligning with microbial behavior at the cellular and ecosystem levels, active antimicrobial packaging represents a powerful, biologically grounded approach to mitigating foodborne risks.
URI: https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/jspui/handle/10553/160265
ISSN: 2079-7737
DOI: 10.3390/biology15040325
Fuente: Biology[EISSN 2079-7737],v. 15 (4), (Febrero 2026)
Colección:Artículos
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